Re: [RFC PATCH 0/2] net: connect to UNIX sockets from specified root

From: Pavel Emelyanov
Date: Sat Aug 11 2012 - 02:24:55 EST


On 08/11/2012 03:09 AM, H. Peter Anvin wrote:
> On 08/10/2012 12:28 PM, Alan Cox wrote:
>> Explicitly for Linux yes - this is not generally true of the AF_UNIX
>> socket domain and even the permissions aspect isn't guaranteed to be
>> supported on some BSD environments !
>
> Yes, but let's worry about what the Linux behavior should be.
>
>> The name is however just a proxy for the socket itself. You don't even
>> get a device node in the usual sense or the same inode in the file system
>> space.
>
>
> No, but it is looked up the same way any other inode is (the difference
> between FIFOs and sockets is that sockets have separate connections,
> which is also why open() on sockets would be nice.)
>
> However, there is a fundamental difference between AF_UNIX sockets and
> open(), and that is how the pathname is delivered. It thus would make
> more sense to provide the openat()-like information in struct
> sockaddr_un, but that may be very hard to do in a sensible way. In that
> sense it perhaps would be cleaner to be able to do an open[at]() on the
> socket node with O_PATH (perhaps there should be an O_SOCKET option,
> even?) and pass the resulting file descriptor to bind() or connect().

I vote for this (openat + O_WHATEVER on a unix socket) as well. It will
help us in checkpoint-restore, making handling of overmounted/unlinked
sockets much cleaner.

> -hpa

Thanks,
Pavel

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